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Avaya 9608 - Switching and Transferring Calls

Avaya 9608
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Enter a digit that makes the value of the last three fields of an IPv4 address exceed 255.
Enter a digit that makes the value of any field of a subnet mask exceed 255.
Enter an IPv6 address using only numbers on the dial pad. Use single tap for touch screen
telephones, except for 2 and 3 which are alphanumeric multitap fields. When you press 2 the
deskphone initially enters a 2, followed by A, B, C, and back to 2. When you press 3 the
deskphone initially enters a 3, followed by D, E, and back to 3. While the cursor is in any of the
leftmost seven fields, when you press the star (*) button makes the value for the field being
entered to be terminated (a zero is displayed if nothing else is), a colon to be displayed in the
space after the field, and the cursor to move to the next space. Pressing “*” while the cursor is in
the last (right most) field results in an error beep and the cursor being left where it is. An IPv6
address is considered to be complete only if all the following conditions are met:
All seven colons that separate the fields are entered OR the text input field contains at most
one pair of consecutive colons
If one pair of consecutive colons is present, the final field is not “1” or “01”.
If one pair of consecutive colons is present, the address format is not “::FFFF:hhhh;hhhh”.
The value of each field is valid. The following actions cause the value of a given field to be
considered invalid:
- Entering a digit that would cause the value of the first field of an IPv6 address to exceed
FD.
- Entering a third consecutive colon.
- Entering a second pair of consecutive colons.
In a given text entry field, if the either an IPv4 or an IPv6 address can be specified, the initial field
can be ambiguous with respect to whether the entry is an IPv4 or IPV6 address, for example, 123
might be an IPv4 123 decimal or an IPv6 0123 hex. In such cases, text entry follows the IPv6 rules
that hexadecimal characters are allowed and the “*” key inserts a colon character. If the entry is a
hex character (A-F) or a fourth character is entered in the field, the telephone accepts the input is
IPv6 format. Otherwise, the telephone makes the initial validity check when you enter a field
boundary, a colon or decimal point. This initial typographic character determines whether the
overall address must be in IPv4 format with a decimal point or in IPv6 format with a colon. Once
this character is entered, the telephone examines the contents of the first field to ensure
consistency with the field boundary. That is the absence of hex characters, and at most three
characters of value 255 or less, in the first field if the field boundary is a decimal point. If the first
field contains any content inappropriate for the entered field boundary, an error beep is generated.
You cannot enter more content until the contradiction in the text string is deleted, meaning either
the field boundary is deleted or the cursor is moved back and the field contents edited). After you
enter content that identifies the format of the IP address appropriate to IPv4 or IPv6, the rest of the
address entry conforms to that format.
Related links
Using local Administrative Menu procedures on page 36
Using local Administrative Menu procedures
March 2018 Installing and Maintaining Avaya 9608/9608G/9611G/9621G/9641G/9641GS IP
Deskphones H.323 41
Comments on this document? infodev@avaya.com

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